2025 Reading Challenge

I'm back!

February wasn't quite as productive of a reading month as January had been. I blame the fact that I started playing Hades on my Steam Deck and got kinda sucked in. This month was very mixed for me.

6. Blue Sisters - Coco Mellors

1740849503998.png

I loved this one. A great exploration of grief, addiction, and family relationships. All of the sisters were both lovable and flawed and I loved reading about the nuance in their relationships with each other. I had been meaning to pick up this author's first book and I'll make a point to do that sooner rather than later.

7. Small Things Like These - Claire Keegan

1740849869927.png

I enjoyed this, but I think it would have made more of an impact on me if I had waited until Christmas time to read it. I feel like I might have rushed through it and didn't think much about it after I finished it. I liked it, but I will probably watch the film at some point to refresh myself.

8. A Natural History of Dragons - Marie Brennan

1740880039361.png

This was definitely a palate cleanser compared to some of the heavier stuff I had been reading. I'd classify this as "cozy" fantasy; it's an adventure story about a woman going on a science expedition to study dragons. The fantasy elements are very light, it's basically Regency-era England but with dragons. I enjoyed this enough that I might pick up the next one if I need something light. Also I love the covers of these.

9. Ariadne - Jennifer Saint

1740880293097.png

I actually started this on last year on my flight to Greece, but I didn't get too far. At the time I thought it was because I was tired and it was kind of a rough flight, but when I picked it back up again it proved to be a slog. I was already familiar with the myths and I feel like it followed them closely enough that there wasn't a whole lot to keep me invested. It felt like the whole theme of the book is that in most Greek mythology stories, women didn't have a lot of agency... but then most of the book is just Ariadne reacting to things that happen to her instead of the author giving her agency. I also felt that the pacing was painfully slow for a book that was relatively short. I thought I would like this one a lot since I loved Circe by Madeline Miller and The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker but this was a disappointment.

Last night I started reading After Dark by Haruki Murakami since I haven't read one of his in a while and it was one I wasn't familiar with, but after that I think I'm in the mood for some classics. I have a couple Jane Austens, and I just picked up a very pretty copy of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte, who is the only Bronte sister I haven't read before. Hopefully March will be a better reading month overall.
 
Wasn’t sure if I was going to join this again because I haven’t been in a book mood since November. But it hit me this month and I did 2 in a week so I guess I’m back! Minimum goal is again 12 for the year, 15 is my main goal, 20 is my stretch goal.

Book 1: History is All You Left Me by Adam Silvera

IMG_6225.jpeg

I’ve read 2 of his books before. LOVED the one and HATED the other so this could have gone either way. Really enjoyed this one’s exploration of death and grief and how those things can lead you To make toxic and harmful decisions. Also enjoy the exploration of OCD. But the last 50 page are absolutely ridiculous and leads to one of my least favorite endings of all time. Feels like the rug gets pulled out from under you and the story you are expecting gets changed without warning or build up. Would have been fine but this ball drop ruins the whole experience

Rating - 2.5/5

Book 2: They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera

IMG_6231.jpeg

Not sure why I went with another one of his books after not loving book 1 but I’ve heard nothing but great things about this. I had nit picks all book about the premise itself and some paradox’s it causes. But then I got to the end and bawled my eyes out harder than any book has made me done before. You obviously know what’s going to happen from the title but man it hurts so hard when it does. Unlike book 1 this book’s ending elevates the whole thing in my mind. Book 3 is going to have to be a pick me up after this lol

Rating - 5/5
 
Ok, I made a reading list for myself from other lists and books/authors I had already been thinking about.
These all won't be this year, but between my local library, borrow from friends, and maybe a couple purchases I'll get into this list as the year progresses.
(going to post this in the general reading thread too)

I'd love to hear any input you folks have on these; which ones are absolutely epic, or snoozefests, or whatever.

Thomas Hardy - Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Thomas Pynchon - Gravity's Rainbow
Iris Murdoch - The Sea, The Sea
Graham Greene - Brighton Rock
Virginia Wolfe - Mrs Dalloway
William Faulkner - The Sound and the Fury
Raymond Chandler - The Big Sleep
Kazou Ishiguro - where to start?
Paul Auster - where to start?
I’ve read a number of these (most in college) and here are my thoughts:

Thomas Hardy. I liked Tess of the d’Urbervilles. It’s fairly readable as I found most Hardy is - at least compared to a lot of the other modern British literature I read in college. I remember liking Jude the Obscure as well.

Thomas Pynchon - I’d agree with the advice you got to read the Crying of Lot 49 first.

Graham Greene - Brighton Rock. I found Greene okay, but none of his stuff stuck out among a lot of what else I read from that era.

Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway. I really enjoyed this novel, particularly from its stylistic perspective. I think it’s well worth your time.

William Faulkner. I love Faulkner and I love the Sound and the Fury. It is also one of the most difficult novels I’ve ever read. The narratives are told from unique perspectives, stream of consciousness abounds, and it may take some rereading to catch everything. But well worth it, but give yourself time and patience in doing so.
 
Book 4: Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan (Anchor, 2014)

A really fun book full of humour. I thoroughly enjoyed this and will definitely be on the lookout for the others in the series.

Book 5: Butter by Asako Yuzuki (Fourth Estate, 2025)

The "it" book of the moment, it seems. I did enjoy this and I've found myself generally enjoying Japanese thrillers/mysteries lately. There is a lot of slow points in Butter which seems to drag at times, but its still a decent read.

IMG_2652.JPG

Book 6: What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami (Vintage, 2007)

A quick easy read that was much more enjoyable than I thought it could be. Part running journal, and part autobiography.

IMG_2885.JPG
 
06. Star Wars: The High Republic ‐ Tempest Breaker by Cavan Scott
1000015004.jpg


My first audiobook.
For the first two phases of the High Republic initiative I just waited and read the script when it was published a few months later, but I didn’t feel like waiting on this one as things are ratcheting up toward endgame. Very well done and immersive production. A bit strange to have voices associated to characters I've been reading for a few years now, some of them felt very off at first, but ultimately I was able to settle in. Some very big shifts happened here, changing the status quo for a bunch of characters headed into the final arc of this High Republic story.
 
Book Seven

IMG_5612.jpeg

Ok so this is good. In fact it’s really good. Tells a narrative about a young couple who move to Berlin over a 10 ish year period (in under 120 pages). When I read the synopsis I thought the characters could potentially be quite grinding but the book is a solid narrative with no dialogue which kinda kills that problem.

Essentially a work on how you deal with being at the cusp of a cultural zeitgeist at exactly the right time in history and a specific point in your life and what happens when that starts to slip away. I loved it!
 
Book 2 (which I started in 12/6/23, lol)
IMG_6017.jpeg
This was my guide through a really long listen to their entire catalog. It ends at Resistance (which I haven’t gotten to listen to three times yet). If you want to have a running commentary on what was going on when the albums were released written from the pov of a very deep fan, then this book is for you. It served its purpose and I will probably read others in the series (it covers the big British bands of a similar time period, book one is Oasis and where I will go next). It is not a Great book though. Serviceable and readable.
 
For Example, today we read:
Biscuit and Little Pup
The Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Lobo
Unicorn’s Love Ice Cream
How to Take Your Octopus to School
Mother Bruce
Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed
Lilly’s Big Day
The Old Man and the Penguin
It’s Okay to Feel
 
07. Face the Music: My Improbable Trip to Saturn (or Close Enough) with Sun Ra by Michael Lowenthal
712z3s0d8OL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg


Now that I've cracked my audiobook seal, I finally got around to checking this one out--which isn't available in print.
A breezy firsthand account of Lowenthal's experience as a trumpet-playing senior when Sun Ra came to Dartmouth to teach and perform with the school's jazz band in 1990. It's a wonderful story, though I found myself mildly annoyed a few times, throughout, without being fully sure whether it was the writing or the reader that was annoying me. Either way, the annoyances were minor and mostly stylistic. Overall, it was a worthwhile hour of listening, and would likely be pretty enjoyable for non-Sun Ra fans as well. Lowenthal manages to capture both uncertainty and resistance to Sunny and his music, as well as the synergy and joy of the Arkestra itself.
 
Back
Top